Friday, October 22, 2004

Taiwan Martial Arts Festivalat The Taipei Youth Activity Center (青少年育樂中心 Y17), 17 Renai Rd., Sec. 2, Taipei (北市仁愛路二段17號).
The center is open from 10am to 9pm, except for Oct. 31, when it will close at 6pm.

Thursday, October 21, 2004

photo: AP
A devotee of the Shrine of Jui Tui has his tongue pierced with a power drill as he walks in a procession for a vegetarian celebration yesterday in downtown Phuket, Thailand. Ritual vegetarianism in Phuket traces it roots back to the early 1800s. The festival begins on the first evening of the ninth lunar month and lasts for nine days. Participants in the festival perform acts of body piercing as a means of shifting evil spirits from individuals onto themselves, in addition to not eating meat.

Wednesday, October 20, 2004

Green Tea* Pickers return home after a hard workday at the tea plantations on Ali Shan Mountain’s slopes.

* - Green Tea is considered one of the most healthy beverages by the World Health Organization.
Checkout more on green tea here.

“In 2001, the World Health Organization determined that men and women of Japan enjoyed the longest "Healthy Life Expectancy" in the world. Scientists have long associated this longevity with, in part, the Japanese people's regular consumption (often over 10 cups a day) of tea. Researchers at the Saitama Cancer Center Research Institute reported in 2000 that people who drank more than ten cups a day of tea experienced significantly better heart and immune system health than those who drank under three cups a day. Green tea is known to contain the highest concentration of health-promoting antioxidants.”

“Green Tea Increases Energy Expenditure in Weight Loss StudyResearchers found that daily administration of green tea extract was more effective than caffeine in stimulating thermogenesis (generation of heat). Green Tea containing 50mg caffeine and 90mg epigallocatechin galllate (a catechin) taken 3 times daily was shown to increase daily energy expenditure by 4.5% compared with the placebo, according to the study in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.”

Estes amigos fazem parte de uma das 10 tribos de natives de Taiwan, os Tsou:
“The Tsou tribe is located in the area around Mt. Ali in central Taiwan and has about 6,000 members. Due to differences in the translation of its name, this group is sometimes known as the Tsao. The social organization of the Tsou is rigidly patriarchal, and women are clearly subordinate to men within the society. The most important tribal ceremony is the "Victory Rite", which involves the renovation of the tribal meeting hall, as well as an elaborate process of inviting, entertaining and seeing off the holy spirits. Of particular note are the complex song and dance arrangements. The hunting and leather-tanning activities of the Tsou men are strongly reflected in the material culture of the tribe.”

Uma aldeia entre as nuvens, onde a “kuba”, ocupa o espaco central.
The typical Tsou house has rounded corners and a dome-shaped thatched roof which extends almost to the mud floor. The men's meeting huts, or kuba, serve as religious, political, and masculinity training centers. Enemy heads and a box of implements for igniting fires are kept there; women are not allowed in a kuba.